NEBRASKA
(2013)
Directed
by Alexander Payne
Paramount,
115 minutes, R (for language, sexual banter, and because the ratings system is
insane)
*
* * * *
Woody hanging on. |
12
Years a Slave is the year’s most important movie, but Nebraska is its best. Similarly, Bruce Dern would be a shoo-in to
win the Best Actor Oscar in any year he didn’t face competition from colleagues
portraying Solomon Northrup or Nelson Mandela, but his is also the finest
single performance of the year.
By now you’ve probably heard the
narrative arc, one that bears some resemblance to The Straight Story (1999). A grizzled and partially senile
curmudgeon named Woody Grant (Dern) receives one of those magazine come-ons
announcing he has won a million dollars (small print: if your number matches)
and decides to walk from Billings, Montana to Lincoln, Nebraska to claim his
prize. His sons David (Will Forte) and Ross (Bob Odenkirk) try to drill sense
into the old codger’s head, but he’s having none of it. It says right on the
paper that he’s won a million bucks and, by God, he means to claim it and he
isn’t about to trust the U.S. mail to deliver his check. Woody is more than
confused; as his long-suffering wife Kate (June Squibb) confirms, Woody in his
dotage is as stubborn as he’s always been—the kind of guy who decides the sky
isn’t blue and, damn it, it’s not. He’s also a miserable SOB who was a problem
drinker, a carouser, and a terrible father who was emotionally and physically
absent. In short, Woody’s the sort of bastard who, if he wasn’t your father,
you’d let him die in a ditch. For all of that, David decides to humor the old
fart and drive him toward Lincoln in the (vain) hope has can talk some sense
into his fool head.
The film is, in essence, a road trip
and like others of that genre involves a serious of mishaps and misadventures.
It also features a stopover in Hawthorne, Nebraska, Woody’s hometown, and one
filled with relatives, old flames, a shady former business partner, Ed Pegram
(Stacy Keach), and conflicting versions of who stole from whom. In Hawthorne,
we discover what the film is really about: the death of the American Dream. Nebraska is filmed in black and white,
which displays the rural nightmare of Hawthorne much better than color ever
could. The surrounding prairie is a place of harsh and stark beauty, but
there’s nothing to redeem Hawthorne, a dying town populated by elderly people,
the skeletal remains of former shops and enterprises, and a couple of seedy
taverns. Not since Peter Bogdanovich offered us Anarene, Texas, in The Last Picture Show (1971) have we
seen a town this unrelentingly bleak.
Payne takes us a step further. No
one will believe David when he tells them Woody isn’t rich; they simply assume
the family doesn’t want to share their windfall. That’s because it’s not just
the town that’s dying, but all the people in it. A poignant visit to the local
cemetery to visit Grants in the ground drives this home. Squibb has a delicious
scene in which she reveals her own raunchy past and spills the beans on the
(less than) angels reposing beneath monuments. But she also notices residents
of whose passing she was unaware. What ‘life’ there is in town is found in the
taverns, but one gets the feeling that the barstools are just rotating
tombstones. There sure isn’t much of a pulse among the assembled Grant clan gathered
at the home of Uncle Ray (Rance Howard) and Aunt Martha (Mary Louise Wilson) to
congratulate Woody (and to plot how they can get a slice of his million-dollar
pie). There is a scene of a cramped roomful of Grant men watching a football
game—the histrionics of the announcer a sardonic contrast to the tightlipped Grants.
The tableau is so heartbreaking that we long to flee and weep. Would it really
matter if any of them struck it rich? What would Woody’s brain-dead cousins
Bart and Cole do with that much money? It’s doubtful they can count past ten.
Have I given too much plot? Not
really. This film is more about what doesn’t happen than what does. And one
must believe that Payne wants to take down the nonsense that America is a land
of boundless wealth and opportunity. Dern’s Woody is the human equivalent of
Hawthorne—a physical wreck unaware of his outward shabbiness, holding on to a
thin stitch holding his forehead together and an even thinner one fastening him
to sanity and life itself. Dern is, simply, magnificent in the role. Likewise,
Squibb’s performance is revelatory. She strikes a delicate balance between
caring and sarcasm, humor and tenacity. It would be a travesty if she doesn’t
win a Best Supporting Actress Oscar.
Make no mistake; Nebraska is not an uplifting film (and
the theater trailers do it a disservice by making it appear to be an edgy
comedy). It’s hard to watch, but you won’t view a better American film in 2013.
Rob
Weir